Print Editions

Artists and fans are taking their music back

In April 2003, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) announced an unprecedented lawsuit against four college students for a combined amount of $98.7 billion. Their crime? Hosting a search engine on their dorm room computers.

Victory at Yale, Hospital next

NEW HAVEN – Even as jubilant members of Locals 34 and 35 at Yale University cheered, sang, and celebrated the best contracts in their history, they vowed to keep up the fight in support of their sisters and brothers in the dietary department of Yale New Haven Hospital.

Small changes, big benefits

Over the next few months, you may notice some changes taking place on the front page of the People’s Weekly World. They might not seem like much, but they’re helping us improve our circulation.

Who owns history?

Book review Who Owns History: Rethinking the Past in a Changing World, by Eric Foner, Hill and Wang, 2003, 233 pp., Paperback, $13.00

The Vanquished: A Puerto Rican novel The Vanquished: A Puerto Rican novel

Book review The Vanquished, by César Andreu Iglesias, University of North Carolina Press, 2002, 232 pp., Paperback, $19.95

World offers food for thought and waffles, too

Marc Brodine grated apples, chopped walnuts and fried bacon for his famous waffle breakfast. And for the more healthy-minded, he had whole-wheat waffles with sesame and sunflower seeds.

This week in sports Trade Regrets?

The Thrill and the Agony This week in sports by Chas Walker

The cultural work has just begun

The Cultural Worker: The notion of the Cultural Worker, the artist-activist, walking among the ranks of radicals, is an idea that has been well-developed over many years

Whats on your plate?

Book review: Food, Inc.: Mendel to Monsanto—The Promises and Perils of the Biotech Harvest by Peter Pringle, Simon & Schuster, 356 pp., $25

Uncovering the real Arnold Schwarzenegger

OAKLAND, Calif. – Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger was a “no show” Sept. 3 when California Gov. Gray Davis and five candidates for governor explained their positions on a wide range of issues in the first debate of the Oct. 7 recall election.

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